flatpack-
^No, I'm trying to Open Up The Argument about UK business regulation or so-called 'red-tape', which is often just another word for employee protections and rules protecting the public from businesses (such as dumping laws, etc.)&
If that's what you were doing, you wouldn't have started your thread with "Anyone who disagrees with me is a Corporate Shill".
You've started by saying "These are the facts, if you disagree, you are paid by a big business to come on to Mumsnet and lie.
What I'm trying to do is actually bring some 'facts' - which you are free to dispute or disagree with, as people have on this thread, rather than just asserting things which they read in the Daily Mail.
This thread got lots of responses, but so far no one has tried actually showing the contrary: that the UK labour market is inflexible or 'too regulated' relative to other first world countries (Apart from the US and Canada, which I show are even more deregulated) and that this is harming people's employment chances.
I'm not saying everyone who disagrees is knowingly lying, though I suspect that some are, and do so because it is in their perceived interest. I do think that some people are misinformed though, and I'd like people to back up their Daily Mail rants which some facts - or anything at all, really.
It's a feeble attempt to discredit someone who disagrees with you. If you want to open it up, try recognising that people disagree for good reasons, and try showing some respect to people who disagree with you.
Sure, I can recognize they may have good reasons, but unless they actually show some evidence to back up their claims, it just becomes a 'what I reckon' to and fro.
So why don't you help me Open Up The Argument by either agreeing, or disagreeing, and backing up your argument with some facts (which can then, of course, be disputed).
You're wrong, as usual, and desperately grasping at the thinnest of straws in order to find something that reinforces your worldview. As EdithWeston points out, the report you linked to doesn't say what you claim it says.
I'm not grasping at anything. You guys have done nothing to actually present a counter-argument. You've attacked the man, but not the ball. The report I linked to makes a pretty good argument that the UK is not a heavily regulated labour market - in fact, it appears to be very deregulated. It provides a set of criteria in the report, which you can look up.
I haven't seen anything from anyone showing how the UK actually has a heavily regulated labour market, and how this is harming business. Why don't you try providing some?